July 29, 2010

Imagine

Digital photography certainly opened new horizons on imaging and gave photographers a very powerful set of tools. We enjoy the quality and spontaneity of digital cameras and the software to handle small or extensive image processing has improved greatly. We can create stitched panoramas for wide field of view photographs, or use software to generate high dynamic range images that yield images of great tonal spectrum and detail. All this has been really great, but …

… imagine the next generation of cameras that, by using more powerful on-board computers, could converge computing and photography. As I write this piece, researchers are busy working on various experiments, experimental cameras that are collectively called “computational photography.” Where there is now some time and space separation between the taking of the photographs and later processing on a separate computers, the new generation of cameras will likely merge these separate activities into one device.

These cameras that bring discrete steps together into a seamless process will bring some very exciting capabilities to photography. Imagine the following:

  • A camera that can record scenes with 10-12 f-stop brightness range, maybe even more
  • A lens that captures an image with information that comes from three separate points and can generate a 3D rendering of the subject that can be seen from different angles
  • A camera that allows photographing a scene and later deciding on the plane of focus
  • A camera that captures 360 degree horizontal field of view and 200+ degree vertical
  • A camera that captures a group photograph where everyone’s expression is as desired, no closed eyes

Now, imagine that these are not some fancy of my imagination and they actually exist!

And you thought the digital-vs-film debate was heated…

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Comments

  1. Artvet says:

    The future may come sooner than we expect. For the general population, inexpensiveness is more important then present capability of the technology. I think that it would be possible to implement HDR into the present, high-end cameras, but it is not done.

    I have heard about a liquid lens experimentation, which would work like our eye lens. Copying of the nature solutions may give us an interesting outcome. The possibility of retinal impulses transfers, or optic nerve “scanning” sounds like SF now but I think it will be achieved one day. This kind of technology would create a lot of social problems which I am not sure how people would solve.

  2. acekin says:

    Artur, Pentax has announced their new SLR that will do in-camera HDR. It is either out or around the corner. I believe that if I am imagining something that is not directly in my field, someone in that field has a working prototype on the workbench. I have seen this happen over and over on variety of products.

    Cemal

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